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  • We have finally come to the last book of The  New Prophecy, a large and bland book with very  

  • little overall plot or even character growth save  for the bits of buildup to the one scene everyone  

  • remembers: Brambleclaw killing Hawkfrost to save  Firestar. You may notice I'm not drawing that,  

  • though, and that's because I committed early on  to drawing one underrated scene from the book  

  • for each episode of Trip Through Time: a still  interesting moment that just isn't drawn or talked  

  • about much in the fandom. But this book, with its  next-to-no material, made that quite difficult.

  • Sunset came out on December 26th of 2005,  almost exactly four months after Twilight.  

  • As with all the other books in this arc  that weren't Dawn, this one was written  

  • by Cherith Baldry, which is about the  only meta thing I'd like to say here,  

  • except that, by this point, the team not only  knew that they would be making a third arc, but  

  • had some ideas of exactly what it would be likeallowing them to foreshadow a few key elements.

  • Graystripe is once again listed as deputy, notsurprise at this point, and Cinderpelt is gone,  

  • leaving Leafpool as Thunderclan's only medicine  cat. Sootfur is dead and Sorreltail has gone off  

  • to the nursery, so the clan now has 11 warriors  instead of 13. Birchpaw joined Whitepaw in the  

  • apprentice den. In addition to Ferncloud and  now Sorreltail, Daisy is also a newcomer in the  

  • nursery, and one last note is that Willowpaw has  been listed as Mothwing's apprentice in Riverclan.  

  • The top 10 characters have 69% of the lineswhich is almost the lowest percentage of the arc,  

  • second only to Moonrise, and this time  around, 44% of the characters are she-cats,  

  • and combined they have 43% of the  lines, less than last book certainly.  

  • Now quickly, let's get into the story because  there's a lot I have to say about this book.

  • The prologue opens for the first timenot in Starclan, but somewhere else,  

  • where Tigerstar and Darkstripe find each other  and Tigerstar explains his plans to continue in  

  • his revenge against Firestar by having his sonsBrambleclaw and Hawkfrost, destroy him and take  

  • over their own clans and the others, which begins  by training them in fighting skills while they  

  • dream. While Tigerstar is confident in Hawkfrosthe is worried about Brambleclaw's loyalty to  

  • Firestar leading him astray, but is confident  that, with teaching, he can use the respect he  

  • has gained as leader of the sun-drowned-place  journey to take over the clans with ease.  

  • Darkstripe offers to help, but Tigerstar refusesand explains that cats in this place must walk  

  • alone. Literally. Back in the living worldStormfur and Brook have come from the Tribe,  

  • and other than telling Brambleclaw that they'd  like to help Thunderclan after their badger  

  • attack, they don't explain why they're at  the lake and not with the Tribe at all.  

  • Leafpool and Crowfeather go their separate ways  now that Leafpool must stay with Thunderclan to  

  • be their medicine cat, and Crowfeather  promises that he will never forget her.  

  • The clan mourn Cinderpelt and Sootfur, and  Sorreltail names her kits: Molekit, Poppykit,  

  • Honeykit, and Cinderkit, after Cinderpelt. Daisyseeing the levels of danger the clan was just in,  

  • wants to take her kits back to the horseplaceand Midnight leaves. Then…*ridiculously* quickly  

  • and with no resolution after all that happened in  Twilight, Squirrelflight and Brambleclaw just get  

  • together and Squirrelflight says she'll talk to  Ashfur. We have only just finished chapter *2*…  

  • Leafpool and Brightheart make up, and then  Leafpool receives a vision showing Brambleclaw  

  • and Squirrelflight walking off into the sunset  as a couple, tails entwined. Then, while trying  

  • to think of how to tell Squirrelflight  about Brambleclaw being in the dark forest,  

  • Spottedleaf interrupts to say that it's not *herfault that Leafpool took her comment as meaning  

  • she should go with Crowfeather instead of stay  with her clan, and either way it turned out fine  

  • and Starclan isn't angry so it's all absolutely  perfectly fine, right? Squirrelflight breaks off  

  • whatever budding relationship she had with Ashfur  and, while on patrol, they find out that fox traps  

  • exist on the territory. Ashfur by the way isnot  taking the break up well and is now avoiding  

  • Squirrelflight altogether. Brambleclaw meets up  with Hawkfrost and Tigerstar again in his dreams,  

  • and both of Brambleclaw's family members help  him think of ways to manipulate Firestar into  

  • making him deputy, which includes deciding that  he will mentor Berrykit so he can fulfill the  

  • deputy requirement. He then lies about where  his injuries are coming from to Squirrelflight.  

  • Leafpool gets a slightly ominous dream wherebunch of Starclan cats say that something bad  

  • is coming for her, and they don't know what, but  that they will be with her regardless. It bears a  

  • striking resemblance to the dream where Cinderpelt  was told she would die...but without the  

  • specificity of her fate. Seeing that it could help  him become the kit's mentor, Brambleclaw helps out  

  • in finding Berrykit who has lost part of his tail  to a fox trap, and Brook plays the most important  

  • role in the rescue, but Brook and Stormfur then  decide to go to Riverclan and to stay at the lake  

  • for good. Riverclan has greencough, Cinderpelt  is nowhere to be found in Starclan, Shadowclan  

  • tries to steal a strip of territory, Willowpaw  becomes an official medicine cat apprentice,  

  • and Mothwing shares a prophecy she supposedly got  about two stones blocking the river, which gets  

  • Brook and Stormfur kicked back out of RiverclanInteresting considering she doesn't believe in  

  • Starclan and needs Mudfur to deliver prophecies  through Leafpool and now Willowpaw. Turns out that  

  • Hawkfrost pressured her into giving that false  prophecy out of a worry that Stormfur would be  

  • chosen as deputy over him, but Mothwing decides  to stop listening to him after the gathering.  

  • Tawnypelt is also, much, much later than her  brothers, brought to Tigerstar, but she refuses  

  • his training and leaves like a sensible personShe tries to talk some sense into Brambleclaw  

  • too after finding him there, but he can't hear  her over the sound of his raging ambition and  

  • blatantly lies about how well he knew Tigerstar  when he was alive so that he can continue his  

  • training. Daisy leaves quietly now that Berrykit  has directly been hurt by being in the clans,  

  • but Cloudtail and Brambleclaw go to get her backwhich, with the eager pleading of her kits, Daisy  

  • agrees to. Leafpool and Feathertail help Willowpaw  get acquainted with Starclan in her dreams and  

  • begin that side of her training, and *finallyDaisy and Brightheart resolve their feelings,  

  • with the former explaining that Cloudtail  would have been this nice to anyone and she  

  • was just jealous of the closeness Cloudtail and  Brightheart shared. This does fit in well with  

  • Daisy's existing perception of how close Smoky and  Floss are and how she would never be a part of it,  

  • but in the Cloudtail case it doesn't work, because  for the last two books he actually has been  

  • neglecting Brightheart in favor of spending every  moment with Daisy and her kits, and he has never  

  • before and will never again display this level of  kindness to other random cats. I'm glad to see the  

  • plotline over but it's not an ending that was  deserved. A few more chapters of border trouble  

  • with absolutely no substance go by, Stormfur and  Brook are made official members of Thunderclan,  

  • Brambleclaw makes Firestar appoint a deputy, the  clan mourns Graystripe, and Leafpool receives a  

  • prophecy saying the deputy should be Brambleclaw  himself, despite him not having an apprentice yet.  

  • Ashfur disagrees, but the clan welcomes him more  or less and Brambleclaw is officially made deputy.  

  • With that in place, Tigerstar and Hawkfrost  are ready to move forward with their plan.  

  • Brambleclaw isn't quite sure yet, so he suggests  they talk about it in the real world. After  

  • another medicine cat meeting where Leafpool finds  out that Cinderpelt's spirit is in Cinderkit,  

  • it is finally time for *the* scene. Brambleclaw  comes across Hawkfrost standing over Firestar,  

  • who he has caught in a fox trap, and asks  Brambleclaw to finish him off. Also Leafpool  

  • is there witnessing it. Brambleclaw says no and  tries to free Firestar, but it is revealed that  

  • this was a test, and Hawkfrost attacks. They fight  and Brambleclaw kills him, making his blood run  

  • into the lake and turning it red, satisfying the  prophecy. Brambleclaw is told he is a wonderful  

  • deputy, and the book ends with Squirrelflight and  Leafpool now sure that he's a great and loyal cat.

  • I'd like to briefly rundown what we learn about  the dark forest in this book, considering it is  

  • the last time you will ever see this version of  the evil afterlife. Keep in mind that, in Sunset,  

  • it is just the or a or Tigerstar's “dark forest,”  not capitalized, and isn't ever given a proper  

  • name or referred to as the Place of No StarsIn that place, it is always dark, there is no  

  • moon and no stars in the sky, and there is  also no prey to catch at all. Essentially,  

  • the reverse of Starclan. Second, like Starclancats here are immortal, and won't become sick or  

  • hungry, but they cannot leave their afterlife to  go back to the living world. They can, however,  

  • learn to bring cats in through their dreamsas Starclan cats can. An additional important  

  • note is that one big punishment factor here is  that cats are kept apart from each other. It is  

  • implied that Tigerstar's meeting with Darkstripe  in the prologue is Darkstripe's first since dying,  

  • and one of only a couple of meetings Tigerstar  has ever had. While they can catch scents of  

  • other residents of the forest, they rarely  if ever get the chance to meet any of them

  • All right, Brambleclaw analysis timeFirst thing's first, he is not as bad  

  • as he was in Twilight. Instead, he spends  practically every waking moment in his book  

  • vehemently declaring to himself how  loyal he is to Thunderclan and Firestar.  

  • However, considering that he simultaneously  trains with his father and Hawkfrost and  

  • how he constantly pushes for Firestar to make him  deputy and for Berrykit to become his apprentice,  

  • it feels like something else. His attitudetaking the kit's disappearance as an exciting  

  • opportunity taking Firestar's grief as a barrier  stopping him from getting the position he deserves  

  • make it feel more like denial: a way to convince  himself that he's still in the right even as he  

  • does bad things for bad reasons. Someone who was  truly motivated solely or even mainly by loyalty  

  • wouldn't push so hard on a grieving leader and  take it as personal when they are slightly delayed  

  • on getting a very rare and exclusive position that  they are not in any way guaranteed. This doesn't  

  • mean that he's automatically a horrible cat; he  did make the right choice eventually, but it does  

  • mean that he is deeply flawed. Brambleclaw hasvery strong ambition, much like his father, which  

  • drives him to care less for the cats around him  and make allowances for bad actions and cats when  

  • they could get him what he wants. Let's be clear  that this isn't a bad character. Having a morally  

  • flawed or even a morally corrupt protagonist  could be really interesting, and many of these  

  • tendencies show up again in different forms in  Hollyleaf, my absolute favorite character. The  

  • issue here is that everything Brambleclaw does is  presented as correct, and he is rewarded for his  

  • behavior rather than punished. The story never  seems to acknowledge or even realize that what  

  • he does is a serious problem, rather than a quick  little mistake thanks to Tigerstar's manipulation.  

  • These are genuine faults in Brambleclaw's mindsetand his usage of politeness and self-declarations  

  • to his own loyalty and goodness are all being used  to conceal, even from himself, the immorality of  

  • his actions. These are faults not with the world  around him believing that he is like Tigerstar,  

  • which for the most part they simply don't, but  with Brambleclaw actually having tendencies  

  • to behave similarly to Tigerstar, and fighting  against that impulse. But he shouldn't be rewarded  

  • for just not choosing to murder his leader after  a moon or more of terrible actions, especially  

  • considering the context. Brambleclaw violates the  deputy must mentor an apprentice rule and didn't  

  • really succeed in bringing the traveling group  together in any ways that they hadn't already  

  • been or didn't do on their own. In my opinion, the  best way to end this sort of character's arc would  

  • have been for him to deny his father's path and  instead work to build up real loyalty in himself,  

  • letting someone else take the position of deputy. As for our other point of view character, Leafpool  

  • is back for ten of the twenty-three chaptersand she is now officially the only character to  

  • have been a point of view in every New Prophecy  book. This is a little odd to say, honestly,  

  • because I couldn't accurately call her the  largest or most important character of the series.  

  • That would go to Brambleclaw, and perhaps  Squirrelflight as well, or anyone else on the  

  • sundrown journey. For the first three and a half  books, Leafpool was just there to be our eyes into  

  • the world that the traveling group left behindand in the last two and a half books she hasn't  

  • done much substantial work, especially insofar  as this arc's plot is concerned. In one chapter,  

  • she found the Moonpool. In another two  chapters, she got to help Mothwing in Riverclan.  

  • In two more chapters, she got to spend time with  Crowfeather, and two more chapters on either end  

  • of that journey were spent on them pining for  a life together that they could never have.  

  • For the rest of the time, she kept working  her role as an eye into Thunderclan,  

  • particularly the lives of Cinderpelt, BrightheartCloudtail, Daisy, Sorreltail and Brackenfur. She  

  • never had the majority of chapters in any bookand it is only in Twilight where I could even  

  • call her one of the most prominent characters  in the story, thanks to that book focusing on  

  • nothing but relationship drama. Her involvement  in Brambleclaw's affairs is particularly jarring.  

  • She commiserated with Squirrelflight about  his behavior and closeness to Hawkfrost,  

  • she directly saw him and Hawkfrost training with  Tigerstar, she was there to witness Brambleclaw  

  • and Hawkfrost nearly killing Firestar, and she  received all three prophecies about Brambleclaw:  

  • the blood will spill blood prophecy, the one  about him and Squirrelflight getting together  

  • and the last about him becoming deputy. She  never does anything with any of this information,  

  • and in fact barely speaks to him at all. Having  a camera into side characters isn't ideal,  

  • but it's relatively normal. However, having her  camera focus on a main character who could have  

  • given his perspective himself, or instead  of giving another relevant character like  

  • Squirrelflight the ability to learn about or  comment on his behaviors, is really strange and  

  • counterproductive. She wasn't ever an unimportant  character, but it feels like the time given to  

  • her consistently through the arc could have been  better divided among more of the traveling group,  

  • or expanding to other clans and their own drama. A side and slightly less important note that I've  

  • been ignoring since Twilight is the discussion  of Cloudtail, Brightheart, and Daisy. When Daisy  

  • arrived, Cloudtail exhibited strong interest in  her and began spending a lot of time with her and  

  • her kits, sometimes doing what could be easily  seen as flirting. Brightheart was jealous of  

  • this and began taking out her feelings by stepping  in more at the medicine den at Leafpaw's expense  

  • and by silently expressing her displeasure with  glares, grunts, and snarls whenever Cloudtail and  

  • Daisy act close in front of her. Daisy meanwhileseems at times overly eager to rely on Cloudtail  

  • and use him as her only protection for her and  her kits. This is a…very uncomfortable plotline,  

  • to say the least, especially with how rushed the  resolution is at the end. Cloudtail's intense  

  • care and loyalty to Brightheart, along with his  sensitivity to her feelings specifically, was one  

  • of their most consistent and touching elements  in the first arc, so seeing that seemingly  

  • discarded for this plotline alone is strange  and damaging to our view of the characters.  

  • Brightheart acting caddy and vindictive whenever  she sees them together also felt deeply out of  

  • character. But Daisy doesn't come away unscathed  either. As a new character, every action she takes  

  • defines in our minds who she is and who she could  become, and this clinginess and opposition to a  

  • character we are meant to sympathize with leads  us towards disliking her immediately, when it  

  • would be a much greater benefit to keep her assympathetic character, seeing as she comes from a  

  • completely different background than any other cat  in the clan and could provide unique experiences  

  • if she is allowed to become part of it. A lot of this book is, once again, fluff.  

  • A few very small plots like Berrykit's escapeDaisy leaving with her kits, Stormfur and Brook's  

  • placement, and the struggle at the Shadowclan  border each last only a couple of chapters and  

  • have no impact on the plot or charactersinstead just being there to fill time.

  • I had a lot to say about this book, considering it  is the culmination of everything the arc has had,  

  • at least in its latter half. But not a lot  happened, and a lot of even my discussion was on  

  • the space it wasted and how the many mistakes over  the arc have led the story in this book to be so  

  • far off-track. The arc as a whole didn't have much  grounding. Its cast and plot wildly fluctuated  

  • from book to book, and very few meaningful  relationships or character developments were  

  • established and kept from each book to the nextThe overall plot of the arc ended halfway through  

  • it and since then it has been staggering along  as it tried to fill the space with random new  

  • elements and a brand new evil afterlife to tempt  a character whose first arc version would never  

  • have been in this situation and whose current  version is being praised for things he should  

  • be punished for. But now that the arc is overfor better or worse, the clans are at the lake,  

  • Brambleclaw is the Thunderclan deputy, and he  and Squirrelflight are together while Leafpool  

  • and Crowfeather broke up after a single nightNow we have the chance to move onto the next arc:  

  • Power of Three, an arc that is a major  turning point in the series in many ways,  

  • and one that is deeply nostalgic to a lot of fansmyself included. I am more than glad to leave The  

  • New Prophecy behind and continue onto The Sight  in the next episodeof our trip through time.

We have finally come to the last book of The  New Prophecy, a large and bland book with very  

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日落和平 (貓戰士第二部第六本) - 穿越時空 - 貓戰士分析(Sunset – Trip Through Time | Warriors Analysis Speedpaint)

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